'60s peace-activist priest Berrigan dies

Group he led burned draft records

Rev. Daniel Berrigan
Rev. Daniel Berrigan

NEW YORK -- The Rev. Daniel Berrigan, a Roman Catholic priest and peace activist who was imprisoned for burning draft files in a protest against the Vietnam War, died Saturday. He was 94.

Berrigan died at Murray-Weigel Hall, a Jesuit health care community in New York City after a "long illness," said Michael Benigno, a spokesman for the Jesuits USA Northeast Province.

"He died peacefully," Benigno said.

Berrigan and his younger brother, the Rev. Philip Berrigan, emerged as leaders of the radical anti-war movement in the 1960s.

The Berrigan brothers entered a draft board office in Catonsville, Md., on May 17, 1968, with seven other activists and removed records of young men about to be shipped off to Vietnam. The group took the files outside and burned them in garbage cans.

The Catonsville Nine, as they came to be known, were convicted on federal charges accusing them of destroying U.S. property and interfering with the Selective Service Act of 1967. All were sentenced on Nov. 9, 1968, to prison terms ranging from 2 to 3½ years.

When asked in 2009 by America, a national Catholic magazine, whether he had any regrets, Berrigan replied, "I could have done sooner the things I did, like Catonsville."

Berrigan, a writer and poet, wrote about the courtroom experience in 1970 in a one-act play, The Trial of the Catonsville Nine, which was later made into a movie.

Berrigan grew up in Syracuse, N.Y., with his parents and five brothers. He joined the Jesuit order after high school and taught preparatory school in New Jersey before being ordained a priest in 1952.

As a seminarian, Berrigan wrote poetry. His work captured the attention of an editor at Macmillan who referred the material to poet Marianne Moore. Her endorsement led to the publication of Berrigan's first book of poetry, Time Without Number, which won the Lamont Poetry Prize in 1957.

Berrigan credited Dorothy Day, founder of The Catholic Worker newspaper, with introducing him to the pacifist movement and influencing his thinking about war.

Much later, while visiting Paris in 1963 on a teaching sabbatical from LeMoyne College, Berrigan met French Jesuits who spoke of the dire situation in Indochina. Soon after that, he and his brother founded the Catholic Peace Fellowship, which helped organize protests against U.S. involvement in Vietnam.

Berrigan traveled to North Vietnam in 1968 and returned with three American prisoners of war who were released as a goodwill gesture. He said that while he was there, he witnessed some of the destruction and suffering caused by the war.

Berrigan was teaching at Cornell University when his brother asked him to join a group of activists for the Catonsville demonstration. Philip Berrigan was at the time awaiting sentencing for a 1967 protest in Baltimore during which demonstrators poured blood on draft records.

"I was blown away by the courage and effrontery, really, of my brother," Daniel Berrigan recalled in a 2006 interview on the Democracy Now radio program.

The Berrigan brothers were sent to the federal prison in Danbury, Conn. Daniel Berrigan was released in 1972 after serving about two years. His brother served about 2½ years.

Philip Berrigan died of cancer on Dec. 6, 2002, at the age of 79.

A Section on 05/01/2016

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